Jump to content

DocNiktMarr

Members
  • Posts

    406
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    55

Everything posted by DocNiktMarr

  1. Point One, I mean to amplify the danger, to lethal levels. Never heard of House of Madness before. Point Two, eh, kinda. It'd be a dream controlled by Freddy, where he (As the ringmaster) would usher you through a midway of familiar freaks - The Deadliest Doll in America! The World's Strongest Momma's Boy! See the American mummy, killed and preserved by her own son! Featuring performances by Pennywise the Dancing Clown(s!), and food from the Sawyer Barbecue restaurant! Basically, almost everyone gets something of a circus makeover, and are sideshow exhibits. Chucky, Jason, Norman Bates, Xenomorphs, Yautja, maybe Bruce the Shark could be on display - it's basically Freddy showing off in a display of intimidation. (Also I heard that the house from the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre is now an actual restaurant. And the owners know it's the Texas Chainsaw Massacre house.)
  2. Little busy, with all the antagonistic characters from multiple media - and anthropomorphic animal characters, possibly to "furry" levels, which, to be honest, kinda takes the whole idea into a bit too goofy of an area. Granted, this is from a guy who made a house idea featuring Cosmonians and War Planet (which despite the name and settup, is a lovable, goofy set of Flash animations - it's "Where Robots Sing For You", for crying out loud). Just for emphasis, here's a page from the Cosmos Zombie Arc: Notice the Zombie has KNEES? As stated, War Planet is Flash, which is hard to work with in-browser these days, so I'm not including a link. It uses real-world songs - including MMMBop, Space Oddity, Gremlin Rag, a real variable mix, really. Halloween featured Five Nights at Freddy's and It's Been So Long (The Living Tombstone), and a Chucky remix - songs like those three would be the score, but probably not any based off of pre-existing franchises. So maybe I'm not the best judge on goofiness breaking the Willing Suspension of Belief. Anyways, you could probably reduce the concept to a madman's House of Madness by itself, just have a lunatic fan force the original crew to reboot it, and making it more "fun" by including a lot of actual danger. Because Steven King and Playstation exclusives... might sound like a match made in heaven, but not by crossing over franchises alone. Though I must admit, now that I think about it, the idea of an event where similar villains and monsters shared the stage actually sounds kind of awesome, if not divisive among the fanbase. Still, I wouldn't go overboard with the crossovers... though my NoES crossover house idea involves a lot of characters from different movies... in a circus...
  3. COMICFURY: Artistic Rage Unleased Attracting artists the world over, ComicFury is a little site that hosts webcomics of all kinds. Hosted by Kyo, everything seems nice and friendly - until a bored artist brought several of the community's creations to life. And it's not just dealing with the day-to-day, he specifically brought out some of the worst things to happen in these comics, for a cheap laugh. All manner of foul creature has been unleashed, from trolls to zombies, and the surge of dark energy is corrupting reality itself - enter the realm of ComicFury ONLY if you're ready to face the Unholy Rage!* *You are not ready to face the unholy rage I've mentioned ComicFury before on these forums, I use it to read comics and upload my own, not that the one that's up is relevant to Halloween Horror Nights (though I may make an Island Under Siege-style attraction plan once I get far enough). Specifically, the POW! Right in the Nostalgia zombie house and a more specific ComicFury Halloween house. Well, you can probably tell which one this is. ROOMS: Facade: The entrance to the house is a grey brick wall. Above the doorway is a large house title, made out of green-tinted pages from comics from the site (used with permission, obviously). The comic pages are also used as transition, though in the transitions they form the walls of the hallway and the title is separate from the pages. Music related to various scenes of the house will play. (Scenes based off of comics will be arranged in any order.) SURGE: Guests enter a future wasteland. Clara is in her time capsule, coughing and warning guests to take cover. Masked members of the Peika hide in the rubble, ambushing guests and threatening them in their language. Theater Of The Bloody Tongue: I don't actually read this due to its Nudity and Sexual theme tags, but the creator likes to volunteer Ariane Eldar for anything and everything - not that I blame him. Guests enter the theater, where Ariane is on stage, playing a victim. Either a monster pops out and attacks guests, or she breaks character and attacks them herself. Stilldown would probably have an interesting track list for the scene. COSMOS: Guests enter a dark wooded area full of dead trees. The Cosmonians (the little alien guys that make up the average cast of COSMOS) are hiding in the trees, scared out of their wits. (No actors nor puppets, seeing as they're barely humanoid at the most humanoid level.) Why are they hiding? Well, Gene accidentally released ZOMBIES. (Actors. For a non-humanoid species, they have a lot of humanoid pop-culture characters - maybe it's the Transformers broadcasts they obviously get...) MK's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: Guests enter Jekyll's lab. Dr. Jekyll can be seen in a mirror, working on something. Turns out, though, Jekyll's not in the room - Hyde is. Hyde rushes through, giving guests a good scare before playing it off as a joke. Near the exit, Robert (Jekyll's cockatoo Louis under the effects of the potion) will swoop down at guests, with the same attitude as Hyde. POW! Right in the Nostalgia: Taking a page from the most recent Halloween special, while presenting an alternate ending, guest go through a hall of mirrors, with a clearing showing the cursed mirror. Normal!Charlotte is trapped inside, begging for release. While guests are distracted, Mirror!Charlotte, in her Demon form, will attack guests from behind. War Planet: Guests find themselves in a vacant facility, where ominous electronic music plays. The lights flicker to the beat. In some doorways, an alien soldier will attack, trying to time itself to the beat/lyrics. Kaza's Mate Gwenna: Another one I don't read, because this one features protagonists running around the jungle, stark naked. Still, TV Tropes mentions something interesting. Guests enter the jungle, where Kaza and Gwenna (mannequins with their genitals and Gwenna's breasts obscured by the scenery) are preparing to attack... something. However, that something is ready to attack the guests, and that something is RO-MAN, THE ROBOT MONSTER! Cryptida: There's actually a lot to choose from, what with the minotaur in the pawn shop, the haunted mansion filled with ghosts, Peter Petch killing and reviving himself in a warlock's tower... Still, I guess we should go back to the beginning, where a Salzburg Chocolate Ball is crashed by a Chupacabra. It's not the SCARIEST thing they encounter (they even keep it as a pet afterwards), but we're still in a chocolate-splattered room dealing with a sugar-hyped reptilian beast. Amadeus (the Chupacabra) is a puppet, hidden around the ball room, and will pop out at guests. The Gernsbeck Department of Cryptozoology will try to catch him, to little avail. Inferno: Guests enter a dark alleyway, covered in chains. Charnabolg will threaten and attack guests, only to be warded off by Jess the Inferno. Hiding at the end of the alley is The Basilisk, holding part of a slain hero. FINALE: Remember when I said that the world itself was being corrupted? Well, the curse has spread to Kyo, who is now a giant, monstrous Kyogator, threatening all in its path. Some of the creators (well, their forum avatars) are turned into gatormen, serving the maddened Gator God.
  4. He hits Tom with a frying pan, is this a trick question?
  5. I'm not being serious, but the little devil thing looks like it's floating - "We all float"? Seriously, though, for some reason, this tweet brings Cthulhu to mind.
  6. It means they hope tons of pumpkin pie is served this year. Might be something related to concessions, might actually be a hint to a house or scarezone. Do they even serve Pumpkin Pie at HHN?
  7. There's not even really enough to list what happens in this idea for a list. SHOW IDEA: ACE OF KNAVES COMEDY CLUB Opening a comedy club in Gotham City is ill-advised, though not outright foolish. Theming it after the clown who's been terrorizing the city for years, however, is outright stupid. Naturally, the Clown Prince of Crime himself has found out about the club, and has decided to crash the party, have a little fun! Ladies and Gentlemen, get ready for tonight's entertainment! Obviously, this idea is for Six Flags Fright Fest, or a hypothetical Horror Made Here reboot. The venue is hidden behind a facade of a classy, if tasteless, Joker-themed comedy club. The building is colored in purple and green, with Joker memorabilia in the windows - there's a vintage collectible motif, with playing cards, figurines, posters, plastic masks, and the like. To the side is some Graffiti left by Joker's underlings. As guests enter the building, however, the dark side of the show becomes visible. The ticket taker is dead behind the box office counter, Smilex'd, and a Joker goon will interact with guests. Inside the venue, the Joker theme continues. Statues of the man himself are on the sides, alongside props such as giant playing cards, theater masks, gags and pranks, all along the purple-curtained walls. As guests take their seats, the show begins. The main show is basically Joker's Insult Emporium. The Joker (I envision a Mark Hamill-style take on the character) will insult guests and give dark anecdotes about what he's been up to - I have a few ideas that still need fleshing out if they're to be used, but one involves Joker murdering a man in front of his coulrophobic girlfriend, and the other involves Joker getting his kicks by giving another Arkham inmate a toothbrush taped to a radio as part of a dare. Then shouting that said inmate has a bomb. About all I've gotten with that second one is that Joker laughs while the guards beat the guy up (probably Edward Nygma or Jonathan Crane), but the first is basically complete - and pretty messed up. Should still probably be tweaked, though. It's also possible that other characters are brought in. Harley Quinn, Ventriloquist and Scarface, a Jim Carrey-esque Riddler, possibly the owner as he dies to laughing gas. Obviously, this would require actors who not only somewhat resemble the Joker, but can put on a good Joker voice, improvise, and get into the Joker mindset.
  8. ...There's a lot of ways that can be interpreted, and almost all of them could lead to interesting houses.
  9. Oh hey, the website's back! Another Icon Idea: THE JUDGE Some people seek authority to make the world a better place, and some people seek authority to become more powerful. Judge Ezekiel Rothburg only sought power - using his position for personal gain, and to bring ruination to those who crossed him. As his power grew, so did his ego - he committed acts that he destroyed others for, excusing himself because "I'm the judge!". Eventually, he even gained a cult of followers, who became his jury and executioners. It all came crashing down, however, when he targeted the mayor of his town. Trying to kill him over some criticism, Rothburg only angered the citizens - the police decimated his followers, and the townsfolk dragged Rothburg out into the streets and gave him some justice of his own. That should be the end of the story, but as his soul rotted in Hell, he started forcing his way up the ranks again. Not wanting to deal with his crap, Lucifer eventually decided to "promote" Ezekiel to Hell's Judge - which was really just a meaningless title and an exile from Hell. With little more than his followers and some Demon Guards (...actually more like Hell's parole officers), Ezekiel Rothburg has returned to Earth. Watch what you do and say, for one slip-up and The Judge will have his way. --- The Judge is the corrupted spirit of a small-town court justice. He and his followers all look corpse-like, with the judge wearing his robe and wig, carrying his gavel. His followers dress like people from the 30's-50's, but faded, with blindfolds covering their gouged eyes. And the Demon Guards are robed figures, carrying swords. The theme of the Judge's HHN would be Crime and Punishment - like Lady Luck's is about making wrong choices, and The Usher is about broken rules, The Judge's houses will all feature the stories of people who committed a crime/sin, and follow with the retribution. For example: Nightmare on Elm Street: Freddy Krueger killed children, only to be mobbed by their parents. The Mummy: Consistently, the Mummy is a character who committed an illegal act, and was punished by being turned into an undead killing machine. The Purge: All crimes are legal for 24 hours - but participating in the Purge means you're just as likely to be killed as any victims you've planned. Chucky: Charles Lee Ray was an asshole who was shot by the cops. Now he's stuck in the body of a doll that sometimes becomes mortal - but he's grown to love it! Ghostbusters: Do they have a permit for that power-sucking "containment unit"? Shut it down! A Halloween Carol: Victor's past catches up to him as he dies in a church. CC: Unheilige Nacht: Those who end up on the naughty list have quite the unpleasant surprise ahead. Windy Gulch: They ate people, and now they're soulless abominations. Many more, these are just some ideas. Notably, he would not share a year with District of Corruption: Capitol Punishment - he's already got the dark side of the law covered, so the two together would be excessive. Alongside an Icon house, he'd also have a show - Court is in Session - where several people are damned for minor crimes in a show trial. Between cases, the Judge will call forth performers, to show how affluent he is - he's one of those jerks. At the end of the event, for the last show, the tables are turned when The Judge himself is put on trial, and dragged off to Hell, possibly forever.
  10. ...but how would it be weird? It's been done before, but here's another take on it - Universal Orlando and Knotts both had houses based on botched paranormal investigations, Edgar Allen Poe (with another Orlando theme park ALSO having one, same year as Universal, actually), horrid events unfurling in space, ominous westerns, and dark takes on Alice in Wonderland, and each time, it was a different story (EAP's madness VS an EAP-inspired killer, cowboy ghosts VS werewolves, an object that causes madness VS teleportation accidents... I think). I'm fairly certain it's a part of the business. I'll admit that, between the two, Universal usually uses a concept first - but nothing's weird with Knott's trying something first.
  11. I'm just imagining that the Restaurant scene would be the only one in the house without blood or gore, even Bloodengutz doesn't want to mess with the owners.
  12. I've been putting this off since March, so... THE YEAR OF FEAR God DAMMIT Jerry, we warned you not to go poking around the library of the arcane. Now you've unleashed a curse, and we'll have to go around the world, suppressing the 12 anomalies that are going to spring from your negligence. And you know who's going to have to pay for that? Not only the Magiks Council, but also the various citizens of the world. Another slip-up and you're fired. -Management When this memo went around the offices of the Magiks Containment Society, everyone nearly had a heart attack. The libraries often contained eldritch tomes of lore, and no one knew which one was opened - anything could happen, and many people, Society and Civilian, could lose their lives, or worse, their souls. Jerry felt the most guilt - he was merely thinking about what to do for his son's birthday when a book titled FESTIVAL dropped on the floor in front of him. He opened it, thinking it was a sign, only for THE FESTIVALS OF THE DAMNED to release 12 curses, one for each month. The Society was in for a busy year... With Holidayz in Hell being revealed, I figured I might as well go back and list my own idea for a Holidays house. ROOMS: Facade: Guests walk into the MCS Building, decorated for a New Year's party. Except a joker has vandalized the New Year's Banner, listing it as THE YEAR OF FEAR, in bloody red font. And also, the entire place is ringing with klaxons from the ANOMALY Alert. As guests go through the hall, a guard will give them safety tips on dealing with several beasts they may or may not encounter. New Year, New Blood: Guests enter a ritzy New York City suite, decorated for NYE in far fancier ways. The glamour of the scene is short-lived, however, when guests realize that the floor is covered in dead revelers. While a creepy rendition of Auld Lang Syne can be heard throughout the suite, vampires that look like any other partygoer will attack, their masquerade masks doing very little to hide the grotesqueness of their faces. As guests enter the next holiday, a crystalline ball drops from above. Nice Day for a Red Wedding: Guests enter a church, where a wedding WAS supposed to take place, however, the bride's trying to call it off because it turns out the groom was less than honest with her. Specifically, he's an incubus. As guests make their ways through the pews, Incubi and Succubi will strike. In the back, the poor bride is in a corner, clutching a cross and begging for mercy. The Incubus will attack the line. St. Patrick's Revenge: Guests find themselves on a Chicago street, where the vengeful spirit of St. Patrick rants on how everyone merely uses his name as an excuse for revelry and debauchery. As guests enter a pub, they find out what his revenge entails: SNAKES. He's brought them all back, they're everywhere, on the drunks, in the drinks, in the walls, the ceiling, the floor, MY GOD THATS A LOT OF SNAKES. Guests exit the bar via bathroom, where a man with a lot of snake venom in him lies in an open stall. A giant snake will lunge out of an adjacent stall. Hell is Full of Fools: April Fools Day sees victims warped into a trickster's dimension. Guests find themselves in a dark revolving tunnel, with only the neon swirls to guide them. As they go through the dark dimension, they can only make out the way - and evil jesters will hide in the dark, preparing to strike. One scene features two identical jesters, one is a lifeless prop, the other a living, breathing scaracter. If guests notice the obvious actor, it'll do little good - he's just there to mock guests who take the bait and are scared by the statue actually being an animatronic. Mayday, Mayday!: Guests enter a grassy picnic area. People WERE having a good time, but all that could ran off - and guests find out why when they encounter nymphs. They viciously attacked the picnic, and still look for victims, their mouths and claws coated with blood. As guests go deeper into the woods, the nymphs become more monstrous, including visible, woody bones and animal skull heads, and torture their prey - drowning a man in the river, shoving the May Pole through a woman, general horribleness. At the end of the scene, the lead nymph attacks - the most monstrous of the bunch, completely wooden and with multiple animal skulls along her skeleton. School's Out: Guests enter a high school, closed for summer. However, they keep stumbling along dead corpses - people who either had business at the school (teachers, the principal, the janitors) or young adventurous students. As guests wander through the halls of learning, the mascot - a wolf - attacks, with weapons ranging from baseball bats to golf trophies. As guests enter the gymnasium, they find a shrine/larder full of half-eaten corpses, murder implements, souvenirs from previous kills, and messages and symbols in blood. The Wolf will attack, this time with a mouth that opens to reveal a gorier orifice than what should be on any costumed character, full of teeth. He'll try to bite guests. July 4: Not sure where those fireworks come from? If you'd check the labels, they'd be no help, because you don't need to list a country of origin when they're made IN HELL! Guests find themselves in a burning backyard, with many odd firework flashes and charred, beer-drinking skeletons. Amongst the flames, are fire demons. As guests enter the house, the fire gets worse and the demons get bolder. Seaside Slaughter: Guests find themselves along a shore, at dusk. It seems quiet, aside from the bodies buried or trying to escape the sand. What's dragging them down? Crab People. That will rise and attack. Going further, guests find themselves under the boardwalk, walking into the water (like Knott's The Depths' and their lasers). What awaits? A GIANT SHARK. SHOKTOBERFEST: Guests enter a Stuttgart Beer Festival, overrun by zombies - apparently a sick person sneezed into a batch of brew. Shame, that was the good stuff. The survivors are trying their best to distance themselves from the undead - ineffectively, what with the closest cover being a tent. And the zombies are eating whatever meat they can find - cooked, raw, or living. Near the end, guests find themselves in a collapsing tent, where zombies can fall through at any moment. The Blaspheming Barn: The next anomaly is on Halloween Night, where a farm is supposed to be having a seasonal shindig. It's going poorly, a warlock has cursed the place, and is using it to collect souls. As guests go through the barn, the decorations attack party guests on behalf of the warlock. Leaving the barn, guests find themselves by an old tree, with scarecrows all over. Not only is the tree angry, but several scarecrows will attack. Finally, guests make a break through the pumpkin patch, where pumpkin-headed ghouls are after your flesh. Turkey Bowl Bloodbath: Guests enter a football stadium's corridors, where the lights flicker on and off. Some wolfmen will prowl the premises, at a level of humanity where they can mock guests. Entering a locker room, several players have been torn to shreds. A more beastly wolfman in football gear will pop out, carrying a severed arm. Finally, the playing field. Amidst the carnage, a full wolf is eating a fallen player. Other, slightly less beastly werewolves will attack. Santa's Little Helpers: For Christmas, guests enter a hostage situation at a mall. A biker gang consisting of disgraced elves and former sidekicks of Santa are to blame. The first encounter is Belsnickle, negotiating with the cops outside the broken window, with a victim in his arms, a gun to their heads. Throughout the store, other bikers attack, hiding behind kiosks and display windows. Near the end, you find the hostage room, where several hostages are trying to escape. Krampus will burst in, and start to beat up a victim, before turning to guests. Jerry's fired: As guests exit the maze, they find themselves in a dirtied MCS office hall. The supervisor can be heard ratting out Jerry. At times, he'll break out of the door, strangling the life out of Jerry.
  13. I mean, the inspiration is supposed to be visible, but at the same time, the characters are "legally" different, such as with the many Scary Tales houses. Plus, parody is protected by copyright law... though I don't know if this is parody. And it wouldn't work for Stitchdoll (Nothing like the inspiration at all) and The Yeti (ancient Cryptid). Also I've read before that Peter Pan's copyright was extended because the plays raised money for a children's charity or something.
  14. Uh... blood is wet bloody gladiators are wet gladiators
  15. Horsemen? World's End? Seeds of Survival? Isn't that a bit too much... apocalypse? Also Disney owns the Simpsons now, so it's probably going to end up like Marvel for a while - a stalemate between theme parks, where one has the license but can't do anything with it for fear of promoting the competition, and the other's parent company owning the franchise but legally unable to add it to the park.
  16. So we're getting a [PLACE CURRENTLY HATED CELEBRITY HERE] house, too?
  17. Can I just ask if the thematically-appropriate carved pumpkins are going to be a recurring theme in the marketing? Or am I overthinking the tiniest of details, and even if my guess is correct it's not going to be important in the long run? Or are the pumpkins from the show, which I wouldn't know because I'm too lazy to watch Stranger Things?
  18. THE HORRIFYING CURSE OF WINDY GULCH Life can be tough in the old west. As of late, the gold rush is winding down, a mysterious drought has killed off the livestock, and everyone's having a hard time getting enough food to eat. What they did to survive was horrible, but what it did to them was even worse. As they ate the flesh of their first victim, a mania awakened in them - they needed more. Over time, as they devoured more, they became deformed - pallid, lipless, hairless, their eyes rotting away in their skulls, their teeth pointed, fingernails razor-sharp, rapidly losing weight, their spines growing unnaturally long. The entire town went mad, demanding flesh, and any wanderer who dares enter Windy Gulch will do just fine. When guests wander into this scarezone, they're surrounded by the typical trappings of a Western set with a dark twist. The building fronts are in heavy disrepair. The horses just died while tied to the hitching rails, years ago, with very little flesh still on the bones. There's a tree filled with nooses - all of them are filled, but the occupants seem to be refusing to die. The prison is covered with skeletons - each wearing a sign stating the crime that sent them to the chopping block. A snake oil wagon is on one end, with the salesman trying to pitch cures. On various posters around the town are the rules - not standard rules, but odd decrees that would be found in a cult. The music has an ominous country bent to it - stuff like Johnny Cash, Colter Wall, Brown Bird and Tom Waits, without the lead vocals. The lighting is a cold, moonlit blue. SCARACTERS: The Townsfolk: ...I think you get the idea. Western characters turned into these... whispermen-esque freaks, with a horrible, greasy frog-like texture to their skin, black spit on their yellow teeth, and decaying bodies. Some have taken damage, the black scabs around their wounds still have a moist quality to them. Those who don't just rip people apart with their claws will use knives, axes, busted bottles, pickaxes, shovels, scythes, sickles, hammers... the like. Stiltwalkers: ^ The Butcher: One of the townsfolk, the butcher looks the part. He carries a cleaver, and will sometimes be seen dragging a body around. Wanderers: People who thought they were just passing through town. But then they broke an obscure rule and were dragged to the stockade, where they'll either die of starvation or be selected by The Butcher. Dr. Miles Pellingway: The medicine man. He stands atop his cart, trying to sell his wares and survive the madness. Odder Townsfolk: I guess there'd be, like... some "saloon girls" who might have been attractive before the curse set in. Maybe a coal miner with a blackened lung hanging out of his opened chest cavity. Kinda want to throw in a Ned Kelly character just because - maybe the curse made him strong enough to rip a feeding hole into his helmet.
  19. Actually, if it was plans for a film, a darker O Brother-esque sepia would also be considered. I get the feeling that modern cinematography techniques mixed with old-style black and white would be kinda... off for a psychotic prohibition movie. Not saying it's impossible (it's probably been done), but it'd be weird for me to be making such a decision. But as it's a haunted house, I'd rather go with an Untouchables monochrome, to make it seem like you're walking through an old noir movie. Even the fire at the end would be black-and-white, using white fire-and-ice lights, white flickering lights, and white flame fans. (Aren't old movie fires, like, really bright?)
  20. Gangsterland Cutthroats Prohibition - an era where banning alcohol caused crime to get worse. People turned to moonshine and bootleg booze, which caused mobs to rise to power. Ruthless competitors rose to power - many above the law, and willing to knock each other off. And the ones like Al Capone were at least decent enough to try to maintain a decent public image - The Cutthroats, a gang rising to prominence, are merely a bunch of cruel jackasses in suits willing to brutally murder anyone who gives them an odd look. Enter Cutthroat territory only if you're looking to have your head turn up in a cornfield... Gangsterland Cutthroats is a Black and White house, featuring raucous jazz, flapper girls, and also the Mafia coming at you with eye gougers. Most of the rooms smell of cigarettes and moonshine, and depression-era jazz can be heard throughout - fading into background noise when appropriate. It probably sounds like I hate alcohol... I kinda do hate it, but I'm okay with other people drinking. ROOMS: Facade: Guests enter the maze through a theater. The Marquee outside has the house name, and as guests make their way through the theater, news reels play, focused on the crimes of rumrunners. In the theater, a drunkard will attack. Streets: Guests exit through the back doors, and find the mayor and some cops dumping a barrel of alcohol into a man hole. The Mayor gives speeches about the dangers of alcohol despite probably carrying a flask on his person. From an adjacent alley, a thug attacks. Speakeasy: Guests enter a Cutthroat-run saloon, filled with passed-out patrons. A jazz band plays on a stage, a flapper dances, and the bartender puts on a friendly act. From a door near the exit, a lookout will burst through, slamming on the walls, screaming a warning of a police inspection. Speakeasy Back: Guests enter a hidden room, filled with barrels of whiskey and a still. Some men are being forced to work the still, while a gangster holds them at gunpoint. He'll turn and threaten guests, warning them to keep out of Cutthroat business. Warehouse: Next door to the speakeasy is an abandoned warehouse, that's perfect for handling rats. As guests make their way through the shelves, they find men being tortured - probably a lot of crushing and cutting, and I REALLY want to have a scene where a motorcycle is used to torture someone (it's held in place, the victim under the running wheel, as it's revved up). Aside from the torturers, a few thugs could be hiding, carrying blades. Running Tunnel: Under the warehouse, guests find themselves in a sewer, filled with barrels of moonshine and corpses. Some mobsters are torturing the mayor for hush money, splashing him in the rancid water. Barn Still: Exiting the tunnel leads guests to another still, this one in a barn. Some farmhands operate the still, threatening guests to force them to leave. The Cornfields: Leaving the barn, guests take a dirt road back to the city. Lining the road is corn, which hides some gangsters disposing of some bodies. One will burst out of the maize, a cleaver in one hand and a head in the other. Protection Racket: The next thing in the city is a general store, where some thugs trash the place while demanding money from the shopkeeper. Shootout: Exiting the store, guests find themselves in the crossfire between the cops and the Cutthroats. Air acts like bullets, an old police siren blares, and guests find themselves walking among the casualty-ridden police side. Slumped on the police car is one cop, a detective will bite it and fall on the car's hood, and as guests exit the scene, a mob boss will break through a door, cigar between his teeth and a tommy gun in his clutches, opening fire like a madman. Finale: Guests enter the speakeasy once more, but this time it's on fire. As guest travel through the flames, the Cutthroats trapped inside will take a few last stabs at them. At the very end, the boss will pop out and deliver the final scare.
  21. ...Probably won't fly, what with all the real monsters and horrible people. Sorry.
×
×
  • Create New...